Ælfgar of Selwood

Ælfgar (Algar), according to 16th-century antiquarian John Leland, was a saint venerated at a chapel in the forest of Selwood, three miles from Mells (near Frome), Somerset.[1] Leland wrote that at the chapel "be buryed the bones of S. Algar, of late tymes superstitiously soute of by the folische commune people".[1] There is no other surviving information on the saint, and it is presumed he was an Anglo-Saxon hermit.[1]

Notes

  1. Blair, "Handlist", p. 503
gollark: https://pastebin.com/W1NrsnQe
gollark: --choice 16 lyricly gollark
gollark: Or I could just steal the potatOS blasphemy detector logic.
gollark: I may need some sophisticated NLP to make it actually work properly, hm.
gollark: --choice 16 lyricly gollark

References

  • Blair, John (2002), "A Handlist of Anglo-Saxon Saints", in Thacker, Alan; Sharpe, Richard (eds.), Local Saints and Local Churches in the Early Medieval West, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 495–565, ISBN 0-19-820394-2
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